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NEW YORK – George Soros’s Open Society Foundations is
seeking to expand the use of electronic and online voting systems
nationwide, according to a leaked Foundations document reviewed by Breitbart News.

While the directive was issued two years ago, the issue of electronic
voting has become a hot button topic in this year’s presidential
election amid fears digital voting systems can be compromised.

The online voting plan was contained in a 67-page hacked file
detailing the September 29-30, 2014 Open Society U.S. Programs board
meeting in New York.

A significant portion of the board meeting was dedicated to methods
the Foundation’s U.S. Programs (USP) could use to further the use of
President Obama’s executive action authority to bypass Congress during
Obama’s final two years in office.

The Open Society, together with partner grantees, assembled a general
list of potential presidential executive actions on numerous issues.
Significantly, the Soros-backed group zeroed in on the expansion of
online voting.

States the document:

“USP will continue to fight against efforts to restrict
voting rights, while supporting steps to improve voter participation and
modernize voting procedures, such as on-line and same-day registration
and expanded early voting. The Brennan Center, Demos and other grantees
have engaged in litigation to expand access to registration and improve
ease of voting.”

The document listed a number of executive action steps that the Obama
administration could take to “ensure greater participation by eligible
voters,” including online voting:

• Direct Health and Human Services to ensure that the federally
facilitated health-care exchanges created as part of the Affordable Care
Act (“Obamacare”) incorporate voter registration opportunities as
required by the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA or “Motor Voter
Act”), and direct federal agencies to find ways to increase voter
participation nationwide.

• Issue guidance interpreting the Americans with Disabilities Act
with respect to accessibility of polling places, privacy when voting,
and competence requirements.

In January 2014, Obama’s 10-person Presidential Commission on Election Administration released its recommendations for reforming the U.S. election process, including transitioning to voting via tablet computers and other technologies.

The commission recommended:

Software-only products can be integrated
with off-the-shelf commercial hardware components such as computers,
laptops, tablets, scanners, printers, and even machine-readable code
scanners and signature pad products.

Tablet computers such as iPads are common
components of these new technologies. They can be integrated into the
check-in, voting, and verification processes in the polling place.

The commission highlighted new technologies in which the voter can
“pre-fill” sample ballots at home to be scanned later at the polling
place.

Obama’s presidential panel dismissed concerns about hacking. The
commission stated: “The fact that a tablet or off-the-shelf computer can
be hacked or can break down does not mean such technology is inherently
less secure than existing ballot marking methods if proper precautions
are taken.”

Those concerns may have been dismissed too soon. Two weeks ago, NBC News cited
intelligence officials revealing hackers purportedly based in Russia
recently attempted to breach state voter registration databases twice.
One of the hacking attempts resulted in the lifting of up to 200,000
voter records in Illinois, according to the officials.

The breach prompted the FBI to issue an unusual nationwide “flash” alert warning states to take immediate measures to beef up the security of their online voting-related systems.

Last month, Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson held a conference call with state election officials related to the matter.

Also last month, Johnson was quoted
as saying during a media conference call hosted by the Christian
Science Monitor that DHS should consider whether to designate the U.S.
election system as a “critical infrastructure.”

“There’s a vital national interest in our election process, so I do
think we need to consider whether it should be considered by my
department and others critical infrastructure,” he added.

On Thursday, however, Johnson downplayed concerns that hackers could alter the ballot count during the presidential election.

“It would be very difficult through any sort of cyber intrusion to
alter the ballot count, simply because it is so decentralized and so
vast,” Johnson said. “It would be very difficult to alter the count.”

Despite Johnson’s claims, however,
hackers would not necessarily need to alter a particular vote count in
order to inject chaos into the U.S. electoral system.

Merely tainting the integrity of the
voting system might be enough to sow discord in the U.S on Election Day.
In other words, even if hackers do nothing, simply claiming to have
altered the results could cause the public to doubt the results.

And hackers might be able to alter ballot counts in swing districts where the outcome might have oversized importance.

Meanwhile, this is not Soros’s only attempt to meddle in U.S. election affairs.

A May 2014 USP board meeting document discussed
the goal of expanding the U.S electorate by “at least 10 million
voters.” The document, first publicized by the Washington Free Beacon,
stated the voter expansion goal would be accomplished “by lowering
barriers to voter registration through the various forms of
modernization and increased ballot access while sustaining and expanding
the franchise by establishing strong protections against vote
suppression, denial and dilution.”

Ten million new voters are low ball numbers. The Soros-funded Brennan
Center was mentioned in the September 2015 board meeting document
reviewed by Breitbart News as engaging with other Soros grantees “in
litigation to expand access to registration and improve ease of voting.”

Brennon’s website has an entire section dedicated
to “Voter Registration Modernization,” explaining its goal is to use
voter modernization to add 50 million more voters to the rosters.

The website states:

The Brennan Center’s signature proposal
to modernize voting would harness proven technology to ensure that every
eligible voter is permanently registered. The move would add 50 million
to the rolls, cost less, and curb the potential for fraud. Already, 48
states and the District of Columbia — without fanfare or partisan
wrangling — have implemented important elements of the plan.